Xu H et al. (JUL 2016)
Organic & biomolecular chemistry 14 26 6179--83
Cellular thermal shift and clickable chemical probe assays for the determination of drug-target engagement in live cells.
Proof of drug-target engagement in physiologically-relevant contexts is a key pillar of successful therapeutic target validation. We developed two orthogonal technologies,the cellular thermal shift assay (CETSA) and a covalent chemical probe reporter approach (harnessing sulfonyl fluoride tyrosine labeling and subsequent click chemistry) to measure the occupancy of the mRNA-decapping scavenger enzyme DcpS by a small molecule inhibitor in live cells. Enzyme affinity determined using isothermal dose response fingerprinting (ITDRFCETSA) and the concentration required to occupy 50% of the enzyme (OC50) using the chemical probe reporter assay were very similar. In this case,the chemical probe method worked well due to the long offset kinetics of the reversible inhibitor (determined using a fluorescent dye-tagged probe). This work suggests that CETSA could become the first choice assay to determine in-cell target engagement due to its simplicity.
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产品号#:
70025
70025.1
70025.2
70025.3
70047
70047.1
70047.2
70048
70048.1
70048.2
产品名:
冻存的人外周血单个核细胞
冻存的人外周血单个核细胞
冻存的人外周血单个核细胞
冻存的人外周血单个核细胞
Radujkovic A et al. ( )
Anticancer research 26 3A 2169--77
Combination treatment of imatinib-sensitive and -resistant BCR-ABL-positive CML cells with imatinib and farnesyltransferase inhibitors.
BACKGROUND: Resistance to imatinib monotherapy frequently emerges in advanced stages of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML),supporting the rationale for combination drug therapy. In the present study,the activities of the farnesyltransferase inhibitors (FTIs) L744,832 and LB42918,as single agents and in combination with imatinib,were investigated in different imatinib-sensitive and -resistant BCR-ABL-positive CML cells. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Growth inhibition of the cell lines and primary patient cells was assessed by MTT assays and colony-forming cell assays,respectively. Drug interactions were analyzed according to the median-effect method of Chou and Talalay. The determination of apoptotic cell death was performed by annexin V/propidium iodide staining. RESULTS: Combinations of both FTIs with imatinib displayed synergism or sensitization (potentiation) in all the cell lines tested. In primary chronic phase CML cells,additive and synergistic effects were discernible for the combination of imatinib plus L744,832 and imatinib plus LB42918,respectively. Annexin V/propidium iodide staining showed enhancement of imatinib-induced apoptosis with either drug combination,both in imatinib-sensitive and -resistant cells. CONCLUSION: The results indicated the potential of L744,832 and LB42918 as combination agents for CML patients on imatinib treatment.
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Tan W et al. (MAY 2006)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 176 10 6186--93
IL-17 receptor knockout mice have enhanced myelotoxicity and impaired hemopoietic recovery following gamma irradiation.
IL-17A is a T cell-derived proinflammatory cytokine required for microbial host defense. In vivo expression profoundly stimulates granulopoiesis. At baseline,the hemopoietic system of IL-17R knockout mice (IL-17Ra(-/-)) is,with the exception of increased splenic progenitor numbers,indistinguishable from normal control mice. However,when challenged with gamma irradiation,hemopoietic toxicity is significantly more pronounced in IL-17Ra(-/-) animals,with the gamma irradiation-associated LD(50) being reduced by 150 rad. In spleen-derived T cells,gamma irradiation induces significant murine IL-17A expression in vivo but not in vitro. After sublethal radiation injury (500 rad),the infusion of purified CD4(+) T cells enhances hemopoietic recovery. This recovery is significantly impaired in IL-17Ra(-/-) animals or after in vivo blockade of IL-17Ra in normal mice,resulting in a reduction of hemopoietic precursors by 50% and of neutrophils by 43%. Following sublethal radiation-induced myelosuppression,in vivo overexpression of murine IL-17A in normal mice substantially enhanced granulopoietic restoration in mice with a 4-fold increase in neutrophils and splenic precursors on day 8 (CFU-granulocyte-macrophage/granulocyte-erythrocyte-megakaryocyte-monocyte,CFU-high proliferative potential),as well as 2- and 3-fold increases of bone marrow precursors,respectively. This establishes IL-17A as a hemopoietic response cytokine to radiation injury in mice and an inducible mechanism that is required for recovery of granulopoiesis after radiation injury.
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产品号#:
03434
03444
产品名:
MethoCult™ GF M3434
MethoCult™ GF M3434
Wendel H-G et al. (MAY 2006)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103 19 7444--9
Loss of p53 impedes the antileukemic response to BCR-ABL inhibition.
Targeted cancer therapies exploit the continued dependence of cancer cells on oncogenic mutations. Such agents can have remarkable activity against some cancers,although antitumor responses are often heterogeneous,and resistance remains a clinical problem. To gain insight into factors that influence the action of a prototypical targeted drug,we studied the action of imatinib (STI-571,Gleevec) against murine cells and leukemias expressing BCR-ABL,an imatinib target and the initiating oncogene for human chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). We show that the tumor suppressor p53 is selectively activated by imatinib in BCR-ABL-expressing cells as a result of BCR-ABL kinase inhibition. Inactivation of p53,which can accompany disease progression in human CML,impedes the response to imatinib in vitro and in vivo without preventing BCR-ABL kinase inhibition. Concordantly,p53 mutations are associated with progression to imatinib resistance in some human CMLs. Our results identify p53 as a determinant of the response to oncogene inhibition and suggest one way in which resistance to targeted therapy can emerge during the course of tumor evolution.
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Postexposure protection of non-human primates against a lethal Ebola virus challenge with RNA interference: a proof-of-concept study.
BACKGROUND We previously showed that small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) targeting the Zaire Ebola virus (ZEBOV) RNA polymerase L protein formulated in stable nucleic acid-lipid particles (SNALPs) completely protected guineapigs when administered shortly after a lethal ZEBOV challenge. Although rodent models of ZEBOV infection are useful for screening prospective countermeasures,they are frequently not useful for prediction of efficacy in the more stringent non-human primate models. We therefore assessed the efficacy of modified non-immunostimulatory siRNAs in a uniformly lethal non-human primate model of ZEBOV haemorrhagic fever. METHODS A combination of modified siRNAs targeting the ZEBOV L polymerase (EK-1 mod),viral protein (VP) 24 (VP24-1160 mod),and VP35 (VP35-855 mod) were formulated in SNALPs. A group of macaques (n=3) was given these pooled anti-ZEBOV siRNAs (2 mg/kg per dose,bolus intravenous infusion) after 30 min,and on days 1,3,and 5 after challenge with ZEBOV. A second group of macaques (n=4) was given the pooled anti-ZEBOV siRNAs after 30 min,and on days 1,2,3,4,5,and 6 after challenge with ZEBOV. FINDINGS Two (66%) of three rhesus monkeys given four postexposure treatments of the pooled anti-ZEBOV siRNAs were protected from lethal ZEBOV infection,whereas all macaques given seven postexposure treatments were protected. The treatment regimen in the second study was well tolerated with minor changes in liver enzymes that might have been related to viral infection. INTERPRETATION This complete postexposure protection against ZEBOV in non-human primates provides a model for the treatment of ZEBOV-induced haemorrhagic fever. These data show the potential of RNA interference as an effective postexposure treatment strategy for people infected with Ebola virus,and suggest that this strategy might also be useful for treatment of other emerging viral infections. FUNDING Defense Threat Reduction Agency.
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